[HY1.5] [Realistic] Vintage Technicolor Film - v1.0

[HY1.5] [Realistic] Vintage Technicolor Film

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The "Core Formula" for Success

According to the official handbook, your prompt should follow this sequence:

Prompt = Subject + Motion + Scene + [Shot Type] + [Camera Movement] + [Lighting] + [Style] + [Atmosphere]

Strategic "Enhancer" Keywords

  • Motion/Dynamics → Surging, gliding, fluid, pirouette, accelerating, subtle crinkling, fluttering.

  • Lighting → Warm golden hour, cool daylight, soft spotlight, harsh shadows, neon-lit, volumetric lighting.

  • Cinematography → Dolly in/out, horizontal tracking shot, low-angle adjustment, 360-degree surround, rack

  • Style/Texture → Photorealistic, cinematic film grain, minimalist, cyberpunk, high-contrast, intricate textures.

  • Spatial Details → Foreground, background, center of the frame, left/right side, overlapping.

Advanced Prompting Techniques

  • Sequential Logic: Use "process" words to guide the AI through time.

    Example: "First... then... next... meanwhile... finally..."

  • Action Details over Emotions: Don't say "a happy boy." Say "a boy smiles, eyes crinkling slightly."

  • Text Generation: To render text accurately, use quotation marks.

    Example: A neon sign that says "NEO TOKYO" flickering in the rain.

  • Negative Prompting: While Hunyuan 1.5 is better at following instructions, standard negative prompts still help:

    static, blurry, low resolution, distorted, watermark, jittery motion, morphing.

Essence Technicolor’s classic look (1930s–1950s) comes from the three-strip dye-transfer process: bold, stable color separations that produce deep reds, clean cyans, creamy yellows, and a uniquely “printed” richness. The image feels luminous, theatrical, and slightly unreal—colors are expressive, not naturalistic.

1) Color Science & Palette

  • Primary bias: saturated reds (costumes, lips, props), cyan-teal skies, warm yellows for highlights.

  • Skin tones: warm, peach-leaning with smooth roll-off; avoid green contamination.

  • Blacks: inky but not crushed; shadows retain detail.

  • Whites: slightly warm, never blue.

  • Rule of thumb: boost chroma selectively—reds + cyans first, protect neutrals.

2) Contrast & Tonality

  • Punchy midtones, gentle toe in shadows, controlled shoulder in highlights.

  • Local contrast elevated (clarity without harshness).

  • Highlights glow rather than clip; shadows stay velvety.

3) Optics & Texture

  • Vintage lenses: mild softness, lower micro-contrast, subtle edge falloff.

  • Halation: warm bloom around specular highlights (practicals, sun rims).

  • Grain: fine, consistent film grain—visible but elegant.

  • Gate weave: minimal, organic micro-movement (avoid modern stabilization perfection).

4) Lighting Language

  • Studio-influenced lighting even outdoors: shaped keys, strong rims, motivated fills.

  • Backlight & rims are key to the glow—separate subjects from backgrounds.

  • Color-aware lighting: warm keys, cooler skies/backgrounds for separation.

5) Production Design & Wardrobe

  • Color blocking matters: choose wardrobe/props that “print” well (crimson, emerald, cobalt, mustard).

  • Avoid muddy earth tones unless intentionally contrasted with a saturated hero color.

  • Sets feel theatrical and composed, not purely documentary.

6) Motion & Camera Feel

  • Measured camera moves: smooth dollies, restrained pans; avoid frantic handheld.

  • Shallow-to-moderate depth to isolate subjects while keeping sets legible.

  • Framing favors symmetry and strong silhouettes.

7) Post & Finish (Implementation Notes)

  • Dye-transfer emulation: emphasize color separation over global saturation.

  • Add soft halation, fine grain, very light gate weave.

  • Keep scratches/dust minimal—clean, prestigious print look rather than distressed.

8) Quick Checklist (for Prompts)

  • “Three-strip dye-transfer color, saturated reds & cyan skies”

  • “Warm skin tones, creamy highlights, velvety blacks”

  • “Soft vintage lens, halation on highlights, fine film grain”

  • “Backlit rims, theatrical lighting, composed framing”

  • “Minimal gate weave, clean archival print”

This overview gives Hunyuan Video clear, production-ready guidance to reproduce a realistic Technicolor vintage aesthetic—bold, luminous, and timeless.

Version Detail

Trained by Tensor
HunyuanVideo_1_5_480P Text2Video
1

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